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SECTION A.TULSA DAILY WORLD. SUNDAY, JULY 2T, 10203SUSPECT HUSBANDOF WIFE'S DEATHEd Warring of Poteu IsHeld Pending Resultof Examination.CARRIED INSURANCEPolicy for $6,500 in Name ofHusband Find Tracesof Poison at Home.POTEAU, Okla., July 2S. AcharRo of murder waa filed todayoltaliint Kd Warrlnp, a farmer IIvIoknear here, whom; wife died suddenlyJuly K. according: to Informationgiven out at the office of Jamesji.,i!h, iiealatnnt 'ounly attorneyu ,. ln 1" in Jail hi rIfinplOM of poison immediatelyhrf.u'' the woman'H death UHerl adt-mand for exhunintion of the body,Babbf. Mild, and the etomueh wanont to the university chemist atthe fnlverslty of Oklahoma, Norman,for examination, rending the examination. WarrlnH was held In Jellhere. A atrona- guard has beenplaced over the man as the woman'sdeath ha caused considerable excitementWarring; a wire was part Indian,ottonllnn to Hahbs and carriedtwo life, insurance In lavor or herhtjiliand.J nlted Stut..R nr, ukM) tr, send corninto this show. The prizes will b i" " d In th- 10. ,o ,.r, nm, ,IB four km Magta eats. The hlKh :"t prizes Will I... H ....v. i. It-obb stated t..day that there wassome splendid corn In f.eek countythis year, and he was sure a numberof farmers would send In exhibits.Will Recommend Hoontin 0. C. Street Car FareOKIMIIDMA CITY. .Iu.lv laThe committee apoplnte,) by MayorWalton to InvesUitate the affairs ofthe Oklahoma Hallway company andthe expediency of authorising an inereaa in th company's street carfares here will recommend Increasedfarea to the elty commission TuesdayIt was announced late today Triecommittee found. It was said, thatthe proposed Increase Is "Juat" ndthat the company must sacrificeservice or becomo Insolvent if theincrease is refused.STATE ROADS REPORTEDWeather Hunan's Helcw showsMajority of Oklahoma llluhwayn Arc lmpnn lint.OKLAHOMA my, July 2 - Thehlehwny weather service of the I nl'll d States weather bureau here to 'Say Issued the follow)!) ilallv report on road conditions In the MatAlva rood. An.idaiko fair; lllaekwrlljfair: Carnegie rood, Cherokee g I.,HI. Imahu full- f'll.Vl'1.1 Hll IT'Oll.Clinton fair: Poller City Kan k IiI'nncan ralr; iiui am goi.n, inoiinnduatjr; Kl Ileno Rood; Knld Hood; ;I ort Hmlth. Ark., fair, rough someplaces, Frederick pood; Clear) good.OuthrH ood. Hastings good; Ho-ibirt food; Holdenvllh' very good;'Hugo excellent; Hydro Modi Mabelgood. Kingfisher food; Ijiwton fair:'MeAlester fair to good: Miami food;!Newklrk Kmd: Oklahoma City good.Ponca Clly good; I'urcell good.Ityan food; Hanulpa fair, Shawneerood, Tohlequah fond; Tiloga ood,Wuurtka fair, Wichita, Knn , food;Wlster good.Sapulpa NotesSAPirLPA, July 24. The Woman's Republican ciub, which was organized here five months ago witha mambarahip of 7 5, la planning fora number of public meetings to bebald durlnf Uie cam pal fn. The firstwtll be held Tuesday night, July 27,at which Ume Congressman J. W.Harreld of Oklahoma, City will address the voters of Sapulpa andCreek county. They are planninglater to have prominent speakersfrom outside the state. Abble Rillerm&n, president of the club, saysthat the purpose of the organizationis to combine efforts of all republican women to co-operate with themen's republican club during thecoining campaign.$ M. Poe, a nogro here, was arrested yesterday for whipping hiswife, and fined, $19.50. He paid hisfine, went home, and aocordtng towitnesses, decided that his wifeneeded another whipping, ho he pro-ceeaeo iu carry uui hh worn. xiwas arrested again and his fine wasraised to $39. After he had paidthis and waa released, he was arrted by County Sheriff AbnerBrurs on an old charge of highwayrobbery.Miss Helen Flchtl, county superintendent of schools, went to Bristowtnrtsy In the Interest of the Bristowschools.III. VV . W I , 1 . t , Ii . , )., M.M VI VII"firsi I'resoyterian cnurcn, reiurneatoday from Arkansas, wchre he hns' t ramnlnir In the llurki withhis family.J. H. N. Cobb, secretary of thechamber of commerce hero, receiveda letter today from the secretary ofthe chamber Of comemrcc at Albuquerriuc, N. M., In which he announced that the first open-to-theworld corn show would be"held thereSeptember 1. Farmers all over theRIGHT FRESHJust Received a Fresh Shipmentof this Handy Office Paste. ItSticks Better than a Friend Whois "Broke."5 oz. Jar 40c,8 oz. Jar 60c,Pint Jar 85c,$ 3.85 Doz.$ 5.85 Doz.$ 8.65 Doz.Qt Jar $1.45, $14.25 Doz.Western Bank Supply Co.315 SOUTH BOSTON0-4693-8393BAKER'SCOCONUTry this canned-in-its-own-milkcoconut cakeTHERE are coconut cakes and coconut cakes. But the chances are goodthat if you've never used Baker's FreshGrated Coconut you've never experiencedreal coconut-cake-del ightBaker's Fresh Grated Coconut is not dry.It is canned in its own milk and comes toyou as fresh as when it left the palm.Just you buy a can of Baker's FreshGrated Coconut today and follow thefamous Baker recipe for u real bakingsuccess.Recipe forCoconut Layer CakeIH cup Bakar'a CaniMKl Coeoavrt (Intjrh mflk lui ban tSocouahiT nreeeed aadadmit h teen aeparetad until liLl aadK to H cup butter.ncup Coecani Milk -or apBkcup Soart ItvW temavooomfiil bfcht powctarMl! mtamr moA buttvr, crruaiac until Hfht.AA well beat t a eg yotka, then milk wkJ halffb (tour, which hua been eiftcd wrth the bufciagpowder. Stir tboronithly, addinc coonnut fromwhtrh milk hai been prreeeid, f4d in the ec white,vrell beaten, reut of the flour, and beat uuaturuntil Uabt and unooth. PVur in lined cakaun and bake In a moderate oven about 35turate. Put tLsprther with coconut kins andfroat with oucouut. rVwne irr(rr oenittinc cocuamttrocn caire, uainc it in the king only.May Ujo be bukud aa a fcuf cake.Coconut Icing' BvraV'DiTSlu,d I MMUI Iffw nrvftr th.' ' ' . Ii i .. n . (I.ua.r rorwl ktadtSM 1 .u,. sf mmrnt aad l cop of Conoaut M Ikoi w.tr' until a atop awxueaa m ct.iu w.t iv. h.t at, h.. .c uu or aa aa btu .1thuuulily. il.eu sdl auaar ni. a few drupi tta uok. btatins coasuuitlr, umu add H cup SM -nutwhidi buWi arSSMa trim aiilk and usr-.l.Sprrad brtwAui cake and an tap fprtaklc wlinU rup ausarad t . ... .. vkauli baa been thoi-ui.iy preaaad Itoai ' aad is vkicta tun tatilci. iful tt euaar have laata atirtad. rtairarwith leawa or vaailla.COCONUT MAIttliat AUXrW ICINO- I.-.Utoqnaiitjtj of couout mlk m MW aad add ata aaasktr ii iiibim iiiiim milPWmm IJII-HJ.WI I'll VHUHLlUJ-a-. JL . u4.t'kaaJMHWaT3aTTfrVY- LJiaaaii raia- .i-r.... -...-.u..i ."Dare to Do Right!77aSeven weeks ao, single handed and alone, we threw down the gauntletto vigorously fight against holding up war pricei of clothing and furnishlngi and to resist Ukefforhj of legtlitrd corporations, private speculators and (lie combined efforts of local competitors to not onlymaintain rxistinii hikli prlcM but to serve notice of intentions to demand further advance of priccrt at points of productiou.Our "No Profit Sale" was our first weapon used against high prices andexcessive profits local competitors collectively urge'd, persisted and finally put their demandsin writing (which we published) that they be allowed to pass judgement on OUT of "misleading" the publie. W believed then as wt liHieve now that the Public was tired of Thi Death Dance of KxtravaRaner" with high prices hereand excess profits there with not a place of economy in the whole spending system.i 'ySo we put up our merchandise at lowered prices as a wall against higherprices, just the same as the wall of Liberty Bonds we took with others was necessary to strikethe enemies of our Nation that wc would do our utmost for the public good. Others were free to do the samehad they seen fit. We have no coypright or patent on business.Though the record of our whole business life is clear that we neverbaited a mercantile hook with unknown or "orphan" or "sweat shop" products to attract patrons, there at once appeared amongst competitors only, antagonistic barkings of accusations in about 57 varieties. We were also besieged by certain producers of goods to not sell their goods nt less than current prices as though wewere their hirelings and not merchants working for the public good in a time of great discontent, using the merchandise whichwe owned and paid for that came to us raised to double and treble prices, from which wc lopped off oilr usual profit in the movemcnt as a beginning to stave off continuance of prevailing high prices.We have a list of manufacturers who urgently demanded that pricesmust be kept up to their standards, etc., etc., the publishing of which would clearly indicatewhere and how high prices and excessive profits originate and arc upheld. Wc also have a list of competitorswho have written protests to certain manufacturers demanding that we hereafter be refused certain lines of apparel becauseour business methods were according to their viewpoint, "unethical" and our prices "against good business."Perhaps we shall publish this list. While it is contrary to our principlesand practices it may in a measure help to convince the public that high wages of the laboringclasses are not entirely to blame for the high cost of certain articles of Men's wearing apparel.We submit we have kept the faith that the people's stamp of approvalof the measures we adopted have compensated our every effort and that the insistence firstgiven that our prices were and would be lower and that our buyers shall NOT make commitments for merchandise at advanced prices has been effective for the public good. ,Our dare to do right and the doing of it at the right time, in making apractical and successful protest against combinations holding up war prices and attemptingto persist in mercantile advances in prices is our Declaration of business independence and every business dayof every week is our day of celebration.So long as the wholesale market offers "breaks" in prices, the CurtisBrown store will continue to reflect them in full. For this store was built on VALUES, is growing on VALUES and will continue to grow that way. If it isn't one thing making better values it is another; forwhere there's a will to lower prices and better values, there's a Curtis Drown way!By This We Shall Stand!Everybody haa a hobby. So have tee. Oura ia to markour mercltandiae oa low oa tee can, inatead of a high aaice dared.irtis 3roin Qo.Tulsa's Livest Leading Men's Store111;jnomiyteny,toMil,rcaIh.thatra.inahatlAithainthsontatrP4.,.'. InUiapand. "J"aa IontUn.ditilunk rk.tel.eausfVanan'Th-TOltDeton -4a, Inom -toaail am.. athe111. hthatw1IkedlllK-ir dtold;heawithy at atn-l-theucla tins-a-lceonthatahter-m.the120.i onwaa. wasthf orherrDe-v-Itiead in1 thUlna:roni